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15 Sentences With "blew the horn"

How to use blew the horn in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "blew the horn" and check conjugation/comparative form for "blew the horn". Mastering all the usages of "blew the horn" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The driver blew the horn at one delivery truck and squeezed by another.
A few days ago, Chelsea Handler took to Twitter and blew the horn of war.
As the train approached the end of the platform, he blew the horn, checked his speedometer, and starting ringing the bell.
Apple blew the horn that told the industry it's okay to drop the headphone port, and everyone fell right in line.
In what seemed to be the end, Laurel placed her last branch and rang the bell, and host TJ Lavin blew the horn indicating the end of gameplay — and victory for Laurel.
"The vehicles were stopped at a red light and the light turned green and when none of the vehicles moved through the intersection the driver of the vehicle where the victim was located blew the horn several times but none of the cars moved through the green light," he said.
Parker and his household moved to the second floor with their guns and were in a good position to defend themselves. The Kline and Gorsuch party surrounded the house, and the US Marshal announced their legal authority to seize Nelson Ford. Parker and his household refused to give up Ford, with some debate. Eliza Parker blew the horn to signal to local Blacks that help was needed.
Not only did he lose sight of his comrades, when he blew the horn, he received no audible response. Unfortunately, the sun was soon setting and night approached. The knight decided to set up a camp for night under an extraordinarily thick and lush oak tree. Suddenly he saw an ominous bright, white light between the far trees and the figure of a white, shimmering lady appeared.
As a child, he had a black friend who was killed by a white man who left him to die in a ditch. The man was never prosecuted, and K Bryce said it "clouded his whole life". (Moore, 1982) As they passed the area, the Bryces slowed their train and blew the horn, picking up women and children. Fearing reprisals from mobs, they refused to pick up any black men.
Ctirad believed her story and untied her from the tree, whereupon she poured mead for the men to show her thanks. Little did the men know that Šárka and the maidens had put a sleeping potion into the mead. When all the men had fallen asleep, Šárka blew the horn as a signal for the rebel maidens to come out of their hiding places and join her in slaughtering the men. Ctirad was captured and then tortured to death in Děvín.
This inspired the legend of Moby-Dick.Marvel Universe #7 When Prince Namor believed that the surface world was destroying Atlantis, he blew the Horn of Proteus to awaken a Giganto and unleashed it on the surface world. Mister Fantastic of the Fantastic Four attempted to slow it down with a smokescreen emitted by the Fantasticar, but was forced to withdraw when the Human Torch attempted to help and ended up having his flame extinguished by Giganto's blowhole attack. In order to destroy Giganto, Thing strapped a bomb to his back and walked into the monster's mouth and planted the bomb there.
At 3:14 of the third period, Ottawa goaltender Martin Gerber appeared to have stopped a shot by St. Louis' Brad Boyes. Replays later showed that the puck actually crossed the goal line before Gerber pulled it back to smother it, but play was immediately resumed without a video review. It was only after 33 seconds of play later that the timekeeper blew the horn to signal a video review. McGeough then admitted that the goal should have counted, but he could not reverse the call due to Rule 78.6 which states that a goal cannot be awarded once the play has resumed.
The terrified farmer is expelled from the cave by a whirlwind and hears the words "Woe is the coward that ever was born, that did not draw the sword but blew the horn". Another very similar one was made into a ballad called Sir Guy the Seeker by Matthew 'Monk' Lewis, and is based on a legend of Dunstanburgh Castle. In his preface to Sir Guy the Seeker Lewis pointed out the similarity to the Alderley legend. Alan Garner used the legend of The Wizard of the Edge, and other local legends, in his novels The Weirdstone of Brisingamen and The Moon of Gomrath.
Initially, the blasts made by the ram's horn were blown during the first standing prayer (Amidah) on the Jewish New Year, but by a rabbinic edict it was enacted that they be blown only during the Mussaf- prayer, because of an incident that happened, whereby congregants who blew the horn during the first standing prayer were suspected by their enemies of staging a war-call and were massacred.Mishnah (Rosh Hashana 4:7 [8]), where once it was customary to blow the shofar during the first standing prayer (Amidah), rather than during the Mussaf-prayer. Later, the practice was changed to make the horn blasts only during the Mussaf-prayer, because of an incident that happened during the Amida. Cf. Babylonian Talmud (Rosh Hashanah 32b).
In 2003, Jo Jo Zep and The Falcons released a new studio album, Ricochet – it was instigated by Neil Mumme, organiser of the annual Great Southern Blues & Rockabilly Festival held annually in Narooma. > In '97 Joe came and blew the horn on the Johnnie Johnson tour, and because > (bass player) John Power was also on tour (with his band The Hippos as the > late Johnson's regular Australian backing band), I said to Joe "What about > we get the Falcons back for a show?" and it was like the Joe Walsh line, > "When Hell freezes over" but I chipped away at it for four years and they > finally did it in 2001, the first show (Jo Jo Zep) had done in twenty years, > and there was such a buzz out of that I said to them, "Why don't you make a > record?" – Neil Mumme The album was recorded at Camilleri's Woodstock Studios in Melbourne and released in September 2003. It was performed by the 'classic' 1977–1981 line- up: Camilleri on vocals and saxophone, Burstin on guitar, Faehse on guitar, Power on bass guitar, Wilde on saxophone, and Young on drums.

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